1. Metabolic brain changes across different levels of cognitive impairment in ALS: a 18F-FDG-PET study
- Author
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Adriano Chiò, Francesca Palumbo, Vincenzo Arena, Umberto Manera, Marco Pagani, Rosario Vasta, Andrea Calvo, Laura Peotta, Jean Pierre Zucchetti, Antonio Canosa, Fabrizio D'Ovidio, Maria Claudia Torrieri, Barbara Iazzolino, and Cristina Moglia
- Subjects
0303 health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Cognition ,Disease ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Frontal lobe ,Positron emission tomography ,medicine ,Hypermetabolism ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,030304 developmental biology ,Frontotemporal dementia - Abstract
ObjectiveTo identify the metabolic changes related to the various levels of cognitive deficits in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) using 18F-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography (18F-FDG-PET) imaging.Methods274 ALS patients underwent neuropsychological assessment and brain 18F-FDG-PET at diagnosis. According to the criteria published in 2017, cognitive status was classified as ALS with normal cognition (ALS-Cn, n=132), ALS with behavioural impairment (ALS-Bi, n=66), ALS with cognitive impairment (ALS-Ci, n=30), ALS with cognitive and behavioural impairment (ALS-Cbi, n=26), ALS with frontotemporal dementia (ALS–FTD, n=20). We compared each group displaying some degree of cognitive and/or behavioural impairment to ALS-Cn patients, including age at PET, sex and ALS Functional Rating Scale-Revised as covariates.ResultsWe identified frontal lobe relative hypometabolism in cognitively impaired patients that resulted more extensive and significant across the continuum from ALS-Ci, through ALS-Cbi, to ALS–FTD. ALS–FTD patients also showed cerebellar relative hypermetabolism. ALS-Bi patients did not show any difference compared with ALS-Cn.ConclusionsThese data support the concept that patients with cognitive impairment have a more widespread neurodegenerative process compared with patients with a pure motor disease: the more severe the cognitive impairment, the more diffuse the metabolic changes. Otherwise, metabolic changes related to pure behavioural impairment need further characterisation.
- Published
- 2020